WASHINGTON -- President Donald Trump's eldest son told a Senate committee Thursday he'd been open to receiving information about Hillary Clinton's "fitness, character or qualifications" in a meeting with a Russian lawyer last year.
But Donald Trump Jr. insisted neither he nor anyone else he knows colluded with any foreign government during the presidential campaign.
His description of a June 2016 meeting at Trump Tower, delivered in an opening statement at the outset of a closed-door Senate Judiciary Committee staff interview, provided his most detailed account of an encounter that has attracted the attention of congressional investigators and special counsel Robert Mueller.
It is also the first known instance of Trump Jr. giving his version of the meeting in a setting that could expose him to legal jeopardy. It's a crime to lie to Congress.
Multiple congressional committees and Mueller's team of prosecutors are investigating whether the Trump campaign coordinated with Russia to influence the outcome of the election.
A grand jury used by Mueller as part of his investigation already has heard testimony about the meeting, which besides Trump Jr., included the president's son-in-law, Jared Kushner, and his then-campaign chairman, Paul Manafort.
Trump Jr. spoke to the committee for about five hours, leaving midafternoon out of view of reporters.
In a statement released afterward, he appeared to suggest he would not testify publicly before the committee, saying he trusted "this interview fully satisfied" the panel's inquiry.
In July, the committee's chairman, Republican Chuck Grassley of Iowa, said he wanted Trump Jr. to appear at a public hearing, though in recent days, he's declined to say whether that still will happen.
Trump Jr. and the Judiciary Committee had negotiated for him to appear privately and be interviewed only by committee staff Thursday.
Senators were allowed to sit in but not ask questions.
According to one person with knowledge of what was said, Trump Jr. told committee staff he didn't inform his father about the June 2016 meeting.
Trump Jr. also said he didn't know or didn't recall the details of White House involvement in his response to the first reports of that meeting, the person said.
The Washington Post reported in July the president dictated a statement saying the meeting primarily concerned a Russian adoption program.
The person declined to be identified because the meeting was private.
Trump Jr., in his prepared remarks, which were obtained by The Associated Press, did not address the drafting of the statement. Instead, he sought to explain emails he released two months ago that showed him agreeing to the meeting, which had been described as part of a Russian government effort to help his father's campaign.
He said he was skeptical of the outreach by music publicist Rob Goldstone, who said he had information that could be damaging to Clinton.
But Trump Jr. said he thought he "should listen to what Rob and his colleagues had to say."
"To the extent they had information concerning the fitness, character or qualifications of a presidential candidate, I believed that I should at least hear them out," Trump Jr. said in the statement.
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